Originally Posted by
Taosaur
I would agree from a practical standpoint to base relationships and predictions of behavior on what people (including oneself) do, and not what we say, but also cut people some slack for exploring themselves and the world, and/or having something to aspire to.
I used to be category-shy as well, but their came points where it would be at least as dishonest or incomplete to deny certain categories as to claim membership. In regard to Buddhism, for instance, I cannot deny the truth of the Buddha's teachings or the exceptional qualities of the Buddhist masters, but neither can I claim to be following those teachings as prescribed, even to the limited extent suggested to laity. So if the question is how do I live, refer to biographies of Baudelaire or Orwell, but if the question is how do I see, study Buddhism and Taoism.
Sexually, I dodged categorization well into my twenties, but now find myself by whatever roundabout route a rather vanilla heterosexual.
I don't go out of my way to behave like either a Buddhist or a straight (aside from meditating/mindfulness and making fuck with ladies), but if someone is trying to figure out where I'm coming from, those are two good starting points.
Sometimes what looks like hypocrisy to the idealist is just the complexity that inevitably branches and roots in us over time.